10 things you need to know today

Kansas City Royals starting pitcher Yordano Ventura, right, was doused by Salvador Perez after pitching a complete game against the Chicago White Sox on Monday.AP/Charlie Riedel
Here is what you need to know.

It's a Fed day. Markets are pricing in just a 22% chance that the Federal Reserve will raise its fed funds rate at Wednesday's meeting, Bloomberg data shows. As always, the decision will cross the wires at 2 p.m. ET along with the Fed Summary of Economic Projections, with Fed Chair Janet Yellen's news conference starting at 2:30 p.m. ET. The US 10-year yield is unchanged at 1.69%.

The Bank of Japan altered its policy. The central bank announced it would target the shape of the yield curve; it aims to keep the 10-year Japanese-government-bonds rate "more or less at the current level" of about 0%.

The British economy has cleared its first post-Brexit hurdle. The Office for National Statistics has released its first report of a special series titled "Assessment of the UK Post-Referendum Economy," and it concludes that the British economy has shown no major impact from the UK's vote to leave the European Union. The British pound is little changed near 1.3100 against the dollar.

Crude oil is surging. West Texas Intermediate crude oil is up 2.2% at $45.00 a barrel after the latest weekly inventory data from the American Petroleum Institute showed a draw of 7.5 million barrels versus expectations for a build of 3.4 million barrels.

Deutsche Bank is the riskiest bank in the world. That's according to the latest data from the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, which says the bank's leverage ratio is at 2.68%, well below the average of 5.6% for banks considered systemically important.

FedEx beat and raised its outlook. The courier giant earned $2.90 a share on revenue of $14.7 billion and said it saw full-year earnings per share in a range of $10.85 to $11.35, a bit light of analysts' estimates.